Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / June 24, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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i THE TIMES-- STEAM BOOK AND JOB OFFICE We keeo on hand a fall ttook cf LETTER HAOS, NOTE HEADS, STATE MENTS, BILL HEADS, ENVEL OPES, TAGS, VISITING CARDS WED . DING INVITATIONS, ETC., ETC. GOOD PRINTING ALWAYS PAYS THE ! l ' ' fime! John B. Sherrill, Editor and Owner. TOIV $1.00 m Ye&r, in Adrxzc: VOLUME XX. CONCORD, N. C, WEDNESDAY. JUNE 24. 1908, Number 00. rtTAtutMtotnttrt 18 ffcyh kosr it. WORN TO A SHADOW. When there is a falling off in flesh in wminan or man there is " something wrong." And that something -wrong, is generally a loss of nutrition due to dis ease of the stomach and the other organ. of digestion and nutrition. Sorne tijmes this loss of fljesh is accom panied by variable appetite, but in many cases the ap petite does not fail and there may be a constant, desire to eat. Languor, . nervousness, irri r tability, sleepless ness, are symptoms often associated with this loss of nutrition and fal ling off in flesh. Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures disease of the stom ach and other or gans of digestion and nutrition. It enables the perfect digestion and assimilation of food so that lost flesh is regained and the physical health re-established. , "I had suffered from indigestion, and only those who have suffered from it know what it really is," write Mrs. M. J. Fazan. of 1613 East Genesee St.. Syracuse, N. V, "I bad bad severe attacks of headache and dizziness, with cold hands and feet ; everything I ate distressed me, bowels were constipated and was fronting very thin and nervous. I cannot half express the bad feelings I bad when I commenced taking Dr.. Pierce's Golden Medical .Discovery. I took nine bottles of the 'Discovery' ana have taken several bottles of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. I commenced feeling better with the first bottle and kept on improving. Now I am so greatly improved in health my friends often speak of it. I most heartily recommend these medicines to all suffering as I was." The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser, in paper covers, is sent free on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps for expense of mailing only. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. TO TEXAS AMD BACK BY TBCCK. rJ 'PR0FM0l?ML CARDS. "dr. h. c. "herring; DentistT Is now.oB the ground floor of the Lltaker f Building. CONCORD, IT. O. Dr. W. C. Houston .Surgeon 'fiS-JL' Dentist, GOlf CORD, H. C. . ' Is prepared to do all kinds of dental work In the most approved manner. Office over Johnson's Drug Store. Residence 'Phone 11. -. office 'Phone 42. Lu TV HARTSELL, - Attorney-at-Law , CONCORD, NORTH OABOUHA. Prompt attention given to all basiness. -Office in Morris building, opposite, the court : house. . . Drs. Lilly & Walker, ' 7Ana nf Cnnrnrd unrt HlirrounMnff countrv. Calls promptly attended day or night. OLD JO IIS CHAM A SI'S ADfKITV III CIKTT DR. J. D. WEBSTER, DENTIST. Fnrmprlv of Wilmington, now of Concord. N. C. oflers his professional services to (the citizens of Concord and surrounding country, Crown, bridge and Dlate work a speciality, Teeth extracted without pain. Prices rea sonable. All work guaranteed. Give him call. Office over Con-ell's Jewe'ry store W J. MONTOOafBBT. - : ' J. IdHBOBOWail - MOSTGOMERY 4 CROWELL, attorneys and. Connselors-at-Lai - OONOOBD, H. O. As partners, will practice law in Cabarrus, . Stanly and adjoining counties, in the 8upe ! rior and Supreme Courts o t the State and In tha ruiorai nniirr.a office in court house. Parties desiring to lend money- can leave it with us or place It in Concord National Bank for im. anil we will lend It on good real es tate security free of charge to the depositor. We make thorough examination of title to lands offered as security for loans. Mortgages foreclosed without expense to owners of same. Mr. Hart's 4,000 nil Drlv for the Benefit Her Baeaaaaa Health. Blngbaniton, H Y, Dispatch. Mr. and Mrs, Frank Hurl, of this city, have just completed a journey which perhaps has not been matched since the days when prairie schooners navigated the country east of the Mis sissippi. They went to Texas and re turned in a truck. The round trip took just a year. ' I Mrs.' Hurl was the prime mover in the enterprise, as she has been in all the affairs of her family since her hus band became ill several years ago. It was for the benefit of her husband's health that the trip was taken. Mr. Hurl was a cartman in this city until he had to give up work about three years ago because of tang trouble. Mrs. 'Hurl then took! her husband's place, driving his truck every day. No work was too heavy for her to under take. She shovelled coal and did heavy moving and similar work. Mr. Hurl's health continued to grow worse, and about a year ago the doc tors advised a change -of climate as the only thing thai would save his life Texas was recommended as a good place for him. :L. Mrs. Hurl quickly conceived the plan of driving to Texas, just as many peo ple from the East traveled to their few Western homes in the first half of the last century. This method of travel was decided upon because it was cheap and also because it was thought that the outdoor life would benefit Mr. Hurl. Mrs. Hurl . accordingly fitted the truck with bows, 'over which she placed a canvas cover, i and packed in the wagon, tent and jother necessary camping articles. On June 10, 1902, the family, consisting of Mr. and Mrs. Hurl and their litttle son, started on their journey. j r Mrs.'Hurl drove most of the time and for the first part of the trip did most of the camp work. The outdoor life was of benefit to Mr. Hurl's health and he was soon able to i do more' work than he had done for two years. The family traveled leisurely, usually making twenty of twenty-five miles a day. They camped jwherever night overtook them, purchasing supplies of the farmers along theway. Mr. and Mr?. Hurl are fond of music, playing the mandolingnitar and cor net. Frequently. while they were trav eling through country districts people would gather at their camp in the evening and they would give a concert During the last half . of the journey they traveled through: country almost as wild as any traversed by the early emigrants. In some place there were nr roads, nothing but rough trails, and it was necessary to ford rivers. Across the Indian Territory the traveling was particularly bad. But in spite of the "hardships, Mrs, Hurl kept pluckily at her task, always thinking of the health of her husband They expected to reach Texas in about three months, but it was on December 19. or more than five months from the tetters from a Self Mad Merchant to Hk Bon." by George Horace Lo rimer. I hear a good deal about men who won't take vacations .and who kiJ themselves by overwork, but it's usually worry or whisky. It's not wht a man does during working hours, bat after them, that breaks down his health. A fellow and his business should be bosom I friends in the office and sworn enemies out of it. A clear mind is one that is swept clean of business at 6 o'clock every night and isn't opened up for it again until after the shutters are taken down next morning?" Some fellows leave the office at night and start out to whoop it op with the boys, and some go home to sit up with their troubles. They're both in bad company. They're the men who are always needing vacations and never eettine any good out of them. - What every man does need once a year is a change of work that is, if he has been curved ud over a desk for fifty weeks and subsisting on birds and burgundy, he ought to take to fishing for a living and try bacon and eees, with a little spring water, for dinner. . " Henry B. Adams. Thos. J. Jerome. Frank-Armfield. Tola D. Maness. Boys are constantly writing: me for advice about how to succeed, and when I send them my receipt they say that I am dealing out commonplace generali ties. Of course I am. but that s what the receipt calls for, and if a boy will take these commonplace generalities and knead them into his-job the mix ture 'II ba cake. - X Once a fellow's got the primary busi ness virtues cemented into his charac ter he's safe to build on. But when clerk crawls into the office in the morn ing like a sick setter pup and leaps from his stool at night .with the spring of a tiger I'm a little afraid that if sent him to take charge of a branch house he wouldn't always be around when customers were. He s the sort of a chap who would hold back the sun an hour every morning and have it gain two every afternoon if the Lord would give him the same discretionary powers that he gave Joshua. And have noticed that he's the fellow who invariably takes a timekeeper as an in sult. HeB pretty numerous in business offices; in fact, if the glance.of the hu man eye could affect a clock face in the same way . that a man's country cousins aged, tnoir - oty "-' i should have to buy a new timepiece for the office every morning. Alms, Jsroaey AraSsld & tas Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, CONCORD, N. C. Practice in all the State and TA S. Courts. Piompt attention given to-collections and general law practice. Persons interested in the settlement of estates,-administrators, executors, and guardians are especially in vited to call on them;' Continued and pain- staking attention will be given, at a reason sonable price, to all leral business Office in Pythian Building, over Dry-Heath-Mliler & Co.'s opposite D. P. Dayvault & Bros, ap-ly There are several reasons why it isn' safe for you to trade on 'Change just now. but the particular one is that Graham & Go., will fire you if you do. Trading on -margin is a good dea! like paddling around the edge of the old Bwimming-hole; it seems safe and easy at first, but, before a fellow knows it, he has stepped off the edge into deep waiter. The wheat pit is only thirty feet across, but it reaches clear down to helli And trading on margin means trading on the ragged edge of nothing! When a man buys, he's buy inir somethin&r that the other fellow time they left Binghamton, when they L f-t ' Wnen a man Bell heB arrived at their journey's end. The BelUj;g ,2 he hasn't got frequent stops of several days at a time . v ... exoerience that the net profit of nothing is nit. The only A MKXACat AND STAT at. Mr. Jofca A. Locals. Mormonism is a social disease. It it were permitted to grow unchecked it would spread itself ! all through the fabric of society and eventually would undermine the structure of the "state. Mormonism means degeneracy, phy sical, moral and pintoaL I know whereof I sneak, because I have lived Utah. My father, many years ago. was stationed as a Government official in that 8 tale, andI spent a good deal of time with him in Salt Lake City. t was after I was married. :. Nobody can go to Salt Lake City and look around him without seeing for himself that the Mormons, as a class, are inferior specimens, physically and in every other way. Wherever they come under your observation , their degeneracy strikes you forcibly. It is natural hat this should be the case, in asmuch as they are the offspring of an unnatural system a system of concu binage, which obtains the name of marriage only by courtesy. Our laws have put a stop to the open practice of polygamy in Utah, but the mischief continues to exist in disguise. In fact, it is spreading over the world to an alarming extent. We hear of new colonies of Mormons being started in Mexico and elsewhere, and all over Europe the agents of the faith are busily engaged in proselytiing seeking with special eagerness to gather young wo men of the peasant class into the fold. The vital quality of Mormonism, which accounts for its persistent survi val, lies in its religious motif. There is nothing that,' once successfully start ed, iB so enduring as a religion. To attack it is only to make martyrs of the believers and to solidify their opposi tion. We have been able to do away with the open polygamy in Utah,! but all the power of the United States Gov ernment is helpless to destroy, or even to weaken seriously, the Mormon faith. Mormonism is a threat to the nation, in a moal and spiritual sense, because of the inevitavble degeneracy, both spiritual and moral, cf the offspring of polygamic marriages. , ! It is a threat to the business pros penty of the country because of its tendency to absorb All wealth into the church. It is a threat politically because the Mormon Church, if it could, WoTiIaTaKnlonf80Wn-DanTiB arrox the power. . : . The only thing to do is to grip it by the throat and, though it cannot be killed, to restrain it as far as, possible from doing more harm. vwnHuuww.ni, i v mm mm mm m wm m. l , This year will go down in hisfcxy as! Tha whole Cbriatiasj world neilM In remarkable for it record of disasters doing bomag to the meoaory of John by storm and flood, j In the earlier Wesley, the founder ef Meihodkm. on month there was the Mississippi over this day which Is the two haa4rdlh flow, washing away levees up and down I anniversary of his birth. the length of the Father of Waters. I fis dame of a ruritaa anenstrr. hk i i ' s Chronicle is not yet a month old father and grandfather before hisa aav and it has chronicled the following dis j iog sulfereJ for rigbteooaoess saks, for asters of this character!: The tornado the riht lo worship God swarding to at Hasting, Neb., where about a doaen the dictate of their own eonecjenoiia. Uvea were lost and the town wiped out John Wesley was born at Epworth on of existence; the flood in the rivr at June 17. 1703. lis was ordained a dea- Des Moines, la., where 6,000 people I con of the Established Church in 1725, were made homeless in a few hxin jwowTd the drgree of M. A. at Oxford and 2,000 buildings submerged; the I in 17S and was ordained a priest in overwhelming of Kansas City and 1 1723. lie was for two years a oitisan Topeka, Kans., by the rise in the Mis-! cf the yoking colony of GeorgU and la soon and the Kaw; -the destruction of 1 1780, ha rior returned to EnrUod. he 00 lives in the Gainesville hurricane; j began his work of organisation whose the freshet in the Paoolet and the I splendid results are seen in the Metho other rivers of the South Carolina I dist Churches of the world todar. Me piedmont, sweeping a si ay half adoien died , in the year 1791, in the eighty big brick cotton mills! in a night and eighth year of his age, having been "in destroying half a hundred lives; the labors more abundant than any man landslide at Melrose, burying the track 1 of his century. Such is a brief outline of the Spartanburg A Asheville Rail road under 25 feet of earth and tnak- . .: . . .... ing it impossible to clear it for a month; the second flood in the Missis sippi and the submerging of East St. Louis; the cloud burst in Willow creek in Oregon and the drowning of 300 peo ple who lived in the residence portion of the town of Heppueir. of the life of a man whose influence for good will extend down to the last syllable of recorded time. He was a man whose heart taught his Ups to speak. Us had a genius for organisation, a personal magnetism that drew men to himself and charged them with , his spirit, but it was his great heart of compassion for fallen hu- J Stockmen who manity that prompted his abounding J have usetL with Ata Wtay mptmUm a "Aad no mm, ars the in a trcj saanns, wo one that Wmrti of 4-j stadia frosa an 1 fetc4 finy wwt ever a farmer. ; AhsKaS iasvSMtble to ssjrw4f I tkwed the SMunesof tQrfWsjihington and My ca 4oiah, ajkd a 1 'Adasn, for iiwtanee, is from an e4 fcajnUy. I "Adam whoT Why, st pUin Adam, KvVs W band, sea I. -Oh aha. r" sr. she. And I didn wns a booormUe ocnpUon, or lbs Lord wouida't set the firs man lie madeatiu No Hair? After foUowing the races a little while a man gets so far behind that be U ad dona able to catch a p. I f kw m fsmat t eery I I fsft a4 1 was rtstfy slam, I I tMt sm4 Afsrs lis Vr aM I I say i assf i si faSlat m mw,"- I I fwjra.O. A, akVsf t Alstaa4rta,0, I I The trouble It yrxirhtlf I I docs not hive life cnocjh. I I Act promptly, Stvc your I I hilr. Ftd it with Aytts I I Htif Vlcor. If the inf I I hairs arc beginning to I I thow, Aycrjs Hilr Vigor I I will restore color every I restore time. ! s HORSE HEN! For aiding the digestion, creatine Appetite and for giving life, vigor and strength to horses and the best remedy of all is It yaav Aiasaa salt ayai faa. SaS a aas VMat aaS a aw 1 1 ij aaa Slants MwnujtMMBS at faat aaatast Him SUa, t na. 4.b4tUiU4Ut,aka. C. B. BLAIR & SOU, Ashcrafrs Condition Powders! Besides these niifarlunest resulting from the rains descending and the tenerrv and sustained him in the naih of I inaiHerent results, con floodB comine. the vear has an far ln aacrifica in hu.h h rhra Ia aalW- Idltion powders recom Drolific of other disasters. These come I bravin? tha acorn of ma fn, ths .W nienucu equally goou -i.i v ... . u . I .-.u.- i nor nonci, caiuc, poui rk!7?T?rV uxp..a4n8uuj try, swine, etc., wiU find the list: The kishineff massacre of I He was eenerous to a faulL eivinrli- a v . in Russia: the earthquake in away all that he had to the noor. and I mA Jews xuraey, uestroying y,uuu lives ana the strength of early Methodum was mules onllf. It is not many villages; the famine in a provi-1 the simplicity of life, the unworldli- a cure-all, but Invalua- nence of China, threatening death bylnees and the capacity for enduring Ible for the purposes starvation to 1,000,000 of the human hardness as good soldiers of Christ, recommended. I a fami'y; the burial of the town of Frank which he taught his followers both by I Ashcraft's Condition Powders 7 7 V f City Painters. star at. i.st sir raw aas rsutaai sens. Do you want youir house painted to llc latctt style ? If so you will save money by em ploying us, Wc also do Hard Oil Finishing in a workman like manner. We have a thou. and different selections of the latest up-to-date designs of 7ALL PAP2-B. W im Um r asat at Mtauvtel fT mm C I1 or Itarrlaoa'sMa. 1 akita Laa4l a ars alao thm , LeidliJ CjjtIUi PiiiUn eHr- WarS 4om a aaoel aattra, U)tas Sattafaotioa or ma i)r 0. B. Blair s Son. in the foothills of the Canadian Book ies by the toppling of Turtle Mountain; the destructive forest fires in the north west portions of the IJnited States; the assassination of the King and Queen of Servia with their retinue and political supporters. j The folio of the year's happenings is but half printed on the press of Des tiny. The forms for six months are yet to be made up. Men may well prsy that the next edition shall not contain so many "scarce" heads over so many tale oth And Jlfiraritian. j Good manner, on Decline. jln delivering the Founder's Day ad dress at the precept and example. The world is richer for the character of John Wesley. are prepared from the formula: of life and I practical veterinarian ot over M years experience, and when once used, horsemen will have no other. Fine Virginia Ham af nilltanatre N.wsnaa Bsira.a. Richmond, Va., June 16. The palatial home of Millionaire. Walter George Newman, Mount Athos, in Orange county, was destroyed by fire at an early hour this morning. The This ts to amlfr that v. Kav hrea al!la Ash.rafi's asoMdias tar a aumbrr of rasra, and thai tbfy bav. girmn iarraal aauarsa- uob. to. uaran arum r isworporaiad la tbelr naotttaeMr., aad asebi nmdr la a elally prepared for th. diseas. fur WBlrh It la laicnaed to ear.. Manr of oar customers bav ins; ased Aaheraft's Bemedle. for years will bav. no otaar. ENGLISH DACO CtL Moaros. Id Iron Steel Plows. Cast Iron, Stoves, Pots and Burnt Iron ot all grades, Brass, Copper, Zinc, Lead, and All Sorts ot Metal bought for cash by : K. L! CRAVEN. With i An Experience ' ; -- OF made on" Mr. Hurl's account had lengthened the time. ! After reaching Texas they were dis appointed. The climate did not agree with Hurl after all. Although he had improved considerably while on the road, he soon began to fail after reach ing the journey's end.! As soon as she saw that life in the southwest would not bring the desired result,. Mrs, Hurl decided to return to her home in this city.j Again the tedi ous journey of more j than 2,000 miles was begun, and just a year from the time they had left this city they re turned to their Binghamton home. Mr. Hurl is still an invalid, although bis health is better than when the open air journey was begun', f A Married Hsb's natlnti. Flttsburg Dls patch. i i my wife wrote jdown everything safe oad to follow in speculation leads straight away from the Board of Trade on the dead run. Of course, the Board of Trade has its legitimate uses, but all you need to know just now is that speculation by a fellow who never owns more pork at a time than he sees on his breakfast plate isn't one of them. When you become a packer you may go on 'Change as a trader. Until then you can go there only as a sucker. "Suing (he Company. Winston Republican. While at the depot waiting for a train last Thursday afternoon the editor of this paper saw no less than five persons in vehicles cross the railroad track at the depot. Not one of these people looked up and down the track or seemed to pay any attention whatever - . , 1 A uufs eavsuo uuguv : vmj , I to the fact that they were crossing to-touy-ography wouiq ne Digger man track although a train was due Webster's Unabridged Dictionary. '( , th ti e Peonfe eet careless about Clifton Company In Lack. , It is stated by one who' knows that the Clifton Manufacturing Company had on hand 9,000 bales of cotton at the time of the great flood in the Paoo let river. Of this amount 6,000 bales were saved and the remainder is ; scat tered here and there along the banks of the Paoolet. Immediately after the destruction of the Clifton' mills, the company disposed of 6,000 bales: at a net profit of something like $150,000. The high price of cotton just at the time the millB were swept away, waa a God-send to the Clifton Manufacturing Co. It' is stated that of the 3,000 bales that are scattered down the Pacolet, the company will realize another J neat profit on. "I ; Believed. She glided into the office and quietly approached the editor's desk. "I have written a poem," she began. "Well!" exclaimed the editor, with a look and tone intended to annihilate. But she calmly resumed; "I have written a poem on My Father's Barn, and" "Oh!" interrupted the editor, with extraordinary Suavity, "you don't know how greatly I am relieved. A poem written on your iatner s ; Darn, eh? I was afraid it was written on paper, and that you wanted me to pub lish it. If I should ever happen to drive past your father's barn I'll stop and read the poem," . j commencement of. Law- rceville School New Jersey, recently, Bflhop Henry C. Potter, of New York, declared that modern education wag I narrowly escaped being burned up in lacking in good manners. I the building. . "We are getting to be in such a Mr. Newman, who was recently mar- hurry in America that the ordinary I ried a second time, has not been to Ashcraft's Powders fatten but blaze is thought to have been the work (never bloat, the hair becoming of an incendiary. '' . I sleek and glossy. Always hgh The buildint.whinh A BXfr. -JW zA,fi1 2i ana was one oi y it. 1VJ X rrfn-rj. the handsomest in the Bute. It stood i on a hill, was supplied with water and lighted by electricity. Granville Coleman, who was sleeping I . a . I in tne house ana taxing care ox it, YEARS W: YEARS IN WRITING j Fire Insurance, settling losses' and representing Strst Glass Companies, - Southern, Northern and For eign, we ask your patronage. Our facilities for Employer s It makes a husband sad to reflect that his wife is more 'afraid of a mouse than she is of him. My daughter Angelina says an en ! ir&crement rine on the finger is worth I o- j i two dozen in the jeweler's window. When Mrs. Noah, on the ark, asked her spouse at 11:30 p. m where he'd such things. This happened in the face of the fact that only a day previous train ran over and killed a horse hitch- to a buggy. Concord Times Yes, and if that train .then due had come along as any one of these five persons was crossing the track and an accident had resulted there would have civilities are disappearing out of -our education and our life," said the New York prelate. ' 'When you have dismiss ed good manners out of society you nave dissmissed that beneficent and kindly instinct toward your fellowman, of which good manners ought always to be the expression. ! "We are face to face with a great social problem, concerning which the minds of most of us! are moving upon distintly wrong lines.) No one who is Conscious of the social and industrial situation can be unconscious of the fact that the classes have drifted away from the masses. And it is surprising how large a portion of them you find disposed to the belief; that in order 'to harmonize the difference the use of force is the only remedy." Mean of Ilia. "I am , afraid, John," said Mrs. Stubb," that you do not appreciate the value of my dog." j "On the contrary," responded Mr. Stubb, "I wish he were even m ire val uable.' J - ! "Iam glad to hear you say that." "Yes, if he were more valuable per haps some one would steal him." his home in Orange since his marriage in New Jersey to Miss Moon, of Lynch burg. .; - - - BlllvtU. PhUoaaphv. Atlanta Constitution. Never mind how the world's going we're in the circus till the light are out. If the devil be in the cyclone, all we've got to say i off in a hurry. ; We're not bothering oursehV as to how old we question Scientists tell us the world is rolling mighty close to the Hereafter so close, in fact, we've sometimes felt like our summer clothes' were scorching. We don't ever expect to be satisfied till we get all that's comin to us but Within the Raoge of Every One: Its the burning truth that I hare the cheapest, prettiest, best and largest stock of Stoves and Furnishings n the city. If you are in the market for anything in my line, men a lady wants a watch, Lnd flMarJ you that y0wiU u she wants one that will keep the the gamer thereby. time as well as look pretty. he will sure cool Our Ladies' Watches are fitted with Elgin or Waltham move- Chain.- Shall. Tbone 163. WAWTKO.-1 ta4anMM paraMW M ... . itAU an ifsriu roe nr mudiiibm the world is: just how long i menis that are fruaranteed a ecu-1 .t.T rar .nn ana isr,, w. l ..! ,:W it im liuiCn ' ; I nfrCBSMiai IRQ vj una mw a. w mac Kauiuji laiu . . . and nrofltabta 11 Watklf cash salary of W aad ID.. When a man wants a watch he wants one i of our modern thin models 'that do not bulge the pocket, yet sacrificing none we put the angels on nouoe that we'll of the strength atid time-keeping Wont ot all Experience.. dan anTthintr be worse than to feel that every minute will be your last? be too tired to tackle the golden harp j qualities of their clumsy prede- Snch was the experience of Mrs. S. II. NewBon.'Decatur, Ala. "Forthreeyears" she writes, "I endured insufferable pain from indigestion, stomach and bowel trouble, Death seemed inevitable when doctors and all remedies failed. At length I was induced to try Electric Bitters and the result was j miraculous. I im proved at once and now I'm completely recovered." For Liver, Kidney. Stomach and Bowel tronbes i Electric Bitters ia the only medicine. Only 50c. It's guar anteed at Fetzer's drug store. business until we get there a thousand years after I cessors. been, and he replied "Oh, seeing the been a Buit agam6t the railroad for, dam- "went." his explanation doubtless But it won't nowadays. ages, and most probably the plaintiff. a verdict for Liability, Accident andj Health meaf8 clean out en dey ain't enough ingto declare off the general strike, I nsurance are excellent. i liouor in de iue ter I make: me smack which was inaugurated March 30th. Insurance are excellent. G. G. RICHMOND & 'Phone 184. Snre Slcas. "Marse Tom. ain't it bout time for you ter run for office agin?" Why no; it's a year off yet. What makes you think so?' WH. Buh. de flour rnnnin' low. de , , . Textile Workers Quit tne, Fight. After a struggle of nearly three months, it appears that the textile operatives of LowelJ have tired in "their fight for an increase of 10 per: cent, in wages in the cotton mills and are will CO. lJtcTahl!isS., UURtS WHUt ALL Ubt Aaa. Beat Cough Syrnp. Taaua ftood. TTe ra time. Hoia or arogtnsia. liquor in de jug my mouth! Cat., Braises, Barns QalekJr HeaVed. Chamberlain's Pain Balm is an anti eentic liniment, and when applied to ' cuts, bruises and burns, causes them to heal without maturation and much more quickly than by the usual treatment. For sale by M. Ii. Marsh, druggist. , Driven t De.peratlon. . Laving at an out of the way place, re mote from civilization, a family is often driven to desperation in case, of accident, resulting in Burns, i Cuts, Wounds Ulcers, etc. Iay in a supply of Bucklen's Arnica Salve. It's the best on earth 25o. at Fetzer's drug store. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Dl- . arrhaea Beaaesly ! Is everywhere recognized as the one remedy that can always be depended upon and that is pleasant to take. It is especially valuable for summer diarrhoea in children and is undoubtedly the means of saving the lives of a great many chil dren each year. For sale by M. 11 Marsh, druggist. , j Waoldo't Be Swlnaled. Mrs. Newed -1 would like a pound of your best cheese.! ' Grocer Yes, ma'am. Mrs. Newed-(examining it) Why, this cheese is full of holes! - Grocer Yes, ma'am. That's the way it comes. j V1 Mrs. Newed Well, I don't want any of it. I'm not going to pay for a pound of cheese that contains a: half pound of holes. Scholarship, at A. & SI. Examinations for admission to the The Reward, af Taj. at. "And how is your son John doing?" "Very well, indeed, thank you. He has just had a call to an Eastern parish where he is to receive a salary of $800. , We are very proud of John's success." "You must be. And your son Jim where is he?" W" "Jim is the lawyer, you know. He is doing very nicely. has been practicing only three years, and .last 3 ear he received in fees near $900. We think he's doing remarkably well. "And your third son, Jasper? Is he wnyr yes. Jasper is under con tract for forty weeks at $500 a week to do a monologue turn in vaudeville." StartUsuc KTiaeBee. Fresh testimony la great quantity is constantly coming, in, declaring Dr. King's Kew Discovery for Qonanmntion Oougbs and Colds to he oneqn&led. i A recent expression from T. J. McFarland W. C. CORRELL Leading Jeweler. TUB Concord National Bank. With the latest approved form of books amjoyory taoUlty tor hand Una; aoooqau. OYTBMM FIRST CLASS SERVICE TO THS TUMUQ. Capital,. - Profit, -Individual responsibility of Shareholders, for nrsaaful fermaaeol encaaetaaat. of IW aad eJi lr.eirtl.ar exp.nsse and botal Mil. advaaeas tm nun ach week. IipsrMws not .ss.ntlal, Ms. tkm refaraoo. aad oocloas wif ainii i a aa Telope. THSMAIIOHAL, MarSO-tSt. KM jJaarbom St UtKao. Cabarrus SaYings, Bank. Coscord Ilbesule, I. C CAPITAL, 050,000.00. Sarslss as4 aadlvtdad nroata, SSI.OOO.OO. Resources Over $300,000. Oeaaral Dank tag Bostaass TrsssartL Ao- ooonu of Individual, firms sad cvrporaUoas soUcllad. We eordlan Invite Every Man, Woman and Child bo wi.be to Taj try somettrfiic Cur a rjalay day," to opea a Savtaw Aoeoaat with as. 4 par eaat. iatarea paid oa savtocs aeposlte aod Ua. eertlneatee. i orncias. D. r.Ai!ioir. m. I. wooDHOfsm. Praaldent. ' ,iir' MABTIff WXiKtt. C W.SWIXK. vica-rraoasH. ipumr. Mar. IS-t. a s-am. . WATED-Taltlifol persoa to travel for well astablieaed boose ta a few coonUas. call In. an retail mercJnt. aad aceota. Uoal territory. Nuary a year ma-, payable tl?0. wewa la easb aad .ssiass. advaaead. i-wrtUon permanent ttumtmwm MMweasfol and rawbina. Racloe.. self -ad- drened envelope. iMaodar. Hoe.M at to AP.t-a dressed envelope. $50,000 22,000 !lCw!lhy mm, m mm m w.oof un frcn Agricultural and Mechanical College at I BentorviUe, Ya, aerves as example. He Kaleign will be held July yth, at 10 a. m., in every county Uourt ' House in the State by the County Superintendent of Schools. The results of these ex- "Well, how do you Uke married l$eV i arninaUons wiU be considered in award inquired the friend. i ing scholarships af the college. Each Not at all," replied the? man who. county Is entitled to as many scholar had married money and was suffering Bhp as it has members of the House for it, "i m case ot matrimonial o EepresentotivesJ dyspepsia." "Matrimonial dyspepsiaf" VYes. She never agrees with she's top rich," r- ' ; Secrets somehow are not' always liquid,, but or other they, always leak writes: " had eronchitis for three years aad doctored all the time without being benefited. Then I hegau taking Dr. King's New Discovery, and a few bottles -wholly onred me. Equally effective in cming all Ieing and Throat troubles. Consumption, Pneumonia and Grip, Guaranteed at P. B. Fetsers drug store. Trial buttles free, regnlar sixes 50c, and $1-00. No this 2 surprises the woman who marries a man to reform him Gke the success of her efforts. Keep Your Accouwt with Us. Interest naid as asrasd. Liberal aooooTno-1 dation to all oar enstotnera. ... J. M. ODl-LU President, D. B. COLTBAJH. Caatuer. WAWTED ! T 1 1 1 1 111 asaaas mmr 7 to 12 Horse Power Engine and boiler wanted. K. L. CRAVEN, ,fi Concord, N. C. are fees sat stranc aad wan ; aK pODT UUle fcHk. are laaa. viseroa. fc-y tie as. of toat facaoo. rajaedj ! FREY'S VERniFUCE OorreeU aU dWordm of Ue etoaaar!. imIi aoraaa. eta ralalaole end poaiuve ta aetioa. a.!, raucr. Bottle by snail. u Ha. Cf.fc:!Lt!a?-:- ' . . j 1 1 J I MO in. WOOUJtf t Piano to exchange for good j I yruVerR,L.r,J,w horse or mule. i; uj'
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 24, 1903, edition 1
1
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